Monster Hunter Wilds is a demanding title, both on PC and current-generation consoles. Even on high-end PCs players will routinely run into performance and stability issues. To improve their experience, players can make use of DLSS, FSR, and frame generation.

However, Monster Hunter Wilds comes with an older DLSS version that is inferior to DLSS 4, which has the latest transformer model. PC players can swap to the latest DLSS version in Monster Hunter Wilds to improve visual clarity and use a more aggressive form quality preset for DLSS despite better results.

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Monster Hunter Wilds DLSS Comaprison

Here is what Monster Hunter Wilds looks like with DLSS 3.7 and DLSS 4.0 when playing Monster Hunter Wilds at the Quality preset at 1080p. As you’re able to see, the detail on the Seikret, and Palico is way more refined in DLSS 4.0 even at this lower internal resolution and everything looks sharper and cleaner.

I have uploaded the same comparison with higher-resolution images atimgslias well.

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Update Monster Hunter Wilds to DLSS 4

PC users can update the DLSS version in Monster Hunter Wilds in a few ways. They can manually swap the DLSS dll file or use DLSS Swapper, which automatically does the job. I much prefer using DLSS Swapper as it makes the process quick, painless, and lets you update the FSR version as well.

Use DLSS Swapper

Here is how you may easily use DLSS Swapper, to update the DLSS version for Monster Hunter Wilds.

Once you hit swap, the DLSS version will be updated to the latest version and will be reflected in the DLSS Swapper app, as well as its in-game overlay. This will produce a much better image result, especially if you’re playing at 1440p, or even a lower resolution like 1080p.

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We highly recommend updating the DLSS version for a far better visual experience in Monster Hunter Wilds. you may alsodownload the high resolution textures packfor the game if your GPU can handle those.

Ali Hashmi

Ali has been writing about video games for the past six years and is always on the lookout for the next indie game to obsess over and recommend to everyone in sight. When he isn’t spending an unhealthy amount of time in Slay the Spire, he’s probably trying out yet another retro-shooter or playing Dark Souls for the 50th time.

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